Difference between revisions of "Cosmic rays"

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The Cosmic Rays page and Cosmic Radiation page have been combined.  Please go to [[Cosmic Radiation]].
 
The Cosmic Rays page and Cosmic Radiation page have been combined.  Please go to [[Cosmic Radiation]].
 
 
Cosmic rays (also known as cosmic radiation) are high energy particles that are part of the background radiation in space.  Most cosmic rays are absorbed in the Earth's atmosphere and do not reach the planet's surface.  However, a cosmic ray that hits an air molecule shatters into a shower of secondary radiation traveling within 1 degree of the original direction, and much of this secondary radiation does reach the Earth's surface.  About 0.390 milliSieverts of radiation per year come from cosmic rays on Earth. (100 milliSieverts of radiation in a year is the smallest amount known to cause an increase of cancer; 400 milliSieverts of radiation in a short time, (under several days), might cause symptoms of radiation poisoning.)  In orbit astronauts take ~150 mSV of radiation (but this includes radiation from the sun.  (Currently trying to find solar and cosmic radiation broken out from each other.) 
 
 
Note that the lowest energy cosmic rays have similar energies to the highest energy particles from the sun, so the two blend into each other.  Strategies to mitigate the strongest solar events will help with the weakest cosmic rays. 
 
 
Cosmic rays have detrimental effects on human health<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_threat_from_cosmic_rays</ref>.   
 
 
 
==Composition==
 
Cosmic radiation comprises 85% protons, 14% alpha particles, and 1% heavy ions.<ref>Schimmerling W. (2011, Feb 5). The Space Radiation Environment: An Introduction. <nowiki>https://three.jsc.nasa.gov/concepts/SpaceRadiationEnviron.pdf</nowiki></ref>
 
 
==Energy==
 
[[File:GCR spectra.png|alt=|frame|Energy distribution of cosmic radiation, as measured during the 1977 solar minimum.<ref>Kim MY, Thibeault SA, Simonsen LC, Wilson JW. (1998). Comparison of Martian Meteorites and Martian Regolith as Shield Materials for Galactic Cosmic Rays. NASA TP-1998-208724. <nowiki>http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19980237030</nowiki></ref>|none]]
 
 
== Variation because of the solar cycle ==
 
The sun has a ~11 year solar cycle.  At the peak of the cycle the magnetic field is stronger, there are more sunspots, and the sun is slightly hotter.  There are more solar flares (coronal mass ejections).  At the low point of the cycle the sun is cooler, and less magnetically active.  At the peak of the cycle the more powerful magnetic field will deflect the weaker cosmic rays away from the ecliptic and redirect them towards the poles of the sun.  Note that the higher power cosmic rays will punch thru regardless, so even when the solar magnetic field is at its strongest, we still get many cosmic rays. 
 
 
This change in radiation is significant, the radiation increase between the very lowest and strongest solar cycles is ~75% (tho ~34% is more typical).<ref>https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019SW002428
 
 
</ref>  This suggests that we can profitably trade off lower cosmic ray doses for higher solar radiation doses by launching missions during solar maximum.
 
 
 
==References==
 
[[Category:Medicine]]
 
[[Category:Radiation Protection]]
 
<references />
 

Latest revision as of 23:27, 1 July 2024

The Cosmic Rays page and Cosmic Radiation page have been combined. Please go to Cosmic Radiation.